FRAGMENTS OF AN EARLY ATTIC KOUROS FROM THE ATHENIAN AGORA' (PLATES 81-84) JT HE splendid kouroi of the Sounion group,2 the earliest big marble statues that have survived in Attica, enjoy a degree of general appreciation that is rare for ancient Greek sculpture in the present day. Before them as before nothing else the classicist and the lover of modern art are able to make joint obeisance. The result has been that analysis has been carried to a finer point than is perhaps justified by the extent of our knowledge. Any new addition in marble to the original body of evidence, however small or poorly preserved, would constitute a welcome counter-balanceto the growing volume of speculation. When the addition comes in the form of fragments of absolutely first-class workmanship, found in the heart of ancient Athens, it is an event that deserves some attention. Over a period of twenty-two years there have come to light in the area of the Agora Excavations six fragments of a large marble kouros of the Sounion group. Two pairs of fragments join, making a total of four separate pieces. A. Pls. 81, a; 82, a, b. Inv. S 530. Part of left forearm and hand. Mended from 1 The photographs of the Agora fragments are by Alison Frantz. Especial thanks are due her for the view of the assembled fragments, P1. 81, a, which entailed special difficulties of arrangement and execution. I am much indebted to Mr. and Mrs. Christos Karouzos for their kindness in making the Sounion and Kerameikos kouroi accessible for study and to Miss Christine Alexander and Dietrich von Bothmer for supplying photographs and measurements of the New York kouros. 2 For the discussion of the group as a whole see G. M. A. Richter, Kouroi, New York, 1942, pp. 47-95. There is a detailed discussion by Miss Richter of the relations between the Dipylon, New York and Sounion kouroi in Metropolitan Museum Studies, V, pp. 20-50, of which the text is repeated in German in the text to Brunn-Bruckmann, Denkrndler, pls. 751-755, with the addition of excellent detailed photographs of the New York kouros. The individual members of the Sounion group which are relevant for the present discussion are: a) the Dipylon head and hand, Athens, National Museum, no. 3372, Kouroi, no. 6 (both pieces now in National Museum). Add to the bibliography in Kouroi: Buschor, Friilgriechische Jiinglinge, Munich, 1950, pp. 14-17, figs. 11-14; Rodenwaldt, Arch. Anz., 1935, cols. 354-364, Beilagen 3-5 (good photographs and illuminating comments on the relation of photographs to the original); E. Homann-Wedeking, Die Anfdnge der griechischen Grossplastik, Berlin, 1950, pp. 75-78; F. Matz, Geschichte der griechischen Kunst, I, Frankfurt am Main, 1950, pp. 186-189. b) the New York kouros, Kouroi, no. 1. Add Buschor, op. cit., pp. 17-22, figs. 15-21; Homann-Wedeking, op. cit., pp. 77-79; Matz, op. cit., pp. 189-190. c) the Sounion statue, Athens, N. M., no. 2720, Kouroi, no. 2. Add Buschor, op. cit., pp. 22-26, figs. 23-27; Homnann-Wedeking,op. cit., pp. 78-81; Matz, op. cit., pp. 190-192. d) the Sounion torso, Athens, N.M., no. 3645, Kouroi, no. 3. Add Buschor, op. cit., pp. 53-54, figs. 54-55; Homann- Wedeking, op. cit., pp. 79-82; Matz, op. cit., pp. 192-193. e) the kouros from the Kerameikos, Athens, N.M., no. 71, Kouroi, no. 8. Add Buschor, op. cit., pp. 53-54, fig. 56. f) the hand in the collection of Mr. Marinos Kalligas, Kouroi, no. 7, Politis, 'ApX.'E+., 1937, pp. 747-753. American School of Classical Studies at Athens is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve, and extend access to Hesperia ® www.jstor.org FRAGMENTS OF AN EARLY ATTIC KOUROS FROM ATHENIAN AGORA 291 two fragments: 1, Wrist. Found February 28, 1935 in a marble pile in the center of the square. 2, Clenched little and third fingers and adjacent part of hand with a little of the marble from the thigh adhering. Found January 1953 in the demolition of a modern house just south of the southwest corner of the square. Total length of the joined fragments 0.32 m. Greatest pres. width of arm 0.099 m. B. Pls. 81, a; 83, b; 84, b, c. Inv. S 287. Part of back and advanced left leg. Mended from two fragments, both preserving surface from back and proper left side, but not extending to front or right side. 1, Small of back and part of left flank. Found February 24, 1933 in a modern wall in the central part of the square. 2, Part of left thigh and buttocks. Found July 30, 1951 in a marble pile in front of the Tholos. Length of the combined fragments 0.555 m. Pres. depth of torso fragment at small of back 0.20 m. Pres. width of torso fragment 0.29 m. C. Pls. 81, a; 83, c, d. Inv. S 1739. Right knee and back of thigh. Found July 1953 in a marble pile in front of the Stoa of Zeus. Pres. height 0.35 m.; width 0. 195 m.; depth 0.215 m. D. Pls. 81, a; 82, d. Inv. S 1908. Fragment from back of left shoulder. Max. pres. dimension 0.244 m. Found April 1955 in the same marble pile east of the Tholos which earlier yielded the left hip B 2. All the fragments are made of a coarse-grained island marble that probablycomes from Naxos.3 Its basic color is white with gray streaks, but the surfaces of A, B and D have taken on a yellowish gray color, while C has the flaked, iron-gray surface of marble that has lain above ground for a long time without much sunlight. All the pieces have traces of mortar adhering to them, and it is likely that those found in the marble piles came, like the others, from modern houses demolished in the course of the excavations. The statue itself may have stood in the Kerameikos cemetery, from which vast numbers of sepulchralmarbles have come into the Agora as building-stones. The left hand, A, has all the characteristics of the Sounion group. The hand is clenched, with the ends of the fingers resting flat against the thigh. The inner outline of the little finger is carved with the flat chisel into the flat side of the fist, and a polygon with bevelled edges is left in the center. The little finger appears to have four joints, two against the thigh and two cut free. Above the end of the finger a narrow strip of marble joins hand and wrist to the thigh for a distance of about 0.11 m., above which the arm hangs free of the body. Above the connecting strip the front and back planes of the arm meet at an obtuse angle. The traces of the drill-holes by which the arm was separated from the body have not been entirely removed. 3 See below, p. 296. 4 Alternatively this is described as a single joint which is made too long (Richter, Kouroi, p. 65; Budde, Die attischen Kuroi, Wiirzburg, 1939, p. 34). 292 EVELYN B. HARRISON The lower end of the ulna is represented as a knob with a ridge around it on the side toward the thumb. All the foregoing features our hand shares with the Sounion, Dipylon (P1. 82, c) and New York kouroi and with the hand in the Kalligas Collection. It is linked more closely to the New York and Dipylon kouroi by the sharp, straight ridge that defines the course of the ulna and by the absence of the lateral grooves that continue the ridge around the elbow in the Sounion kouroi.5 In scale it is extremely close to the hand from the Dipylon (see table of measurements, below, p. 294). The degree of weathering is about the same on the Agora and Dipylon hands but the one from the Agora is more battered. The sharp edge of the first knuckle of the little finger is gone and the junction between hand and wrist is obscured by a break. In both hands the divisions between the fingers were marked out with the pointed chisel and the fingers shaped with the flat chisel, and on both the point-marks remain visible in the valleys.6 On the Dipylon hand, however, the fingers were carefully smoothed with abrasive so that the flat facets left by the chisel have been mostly obliterated, whereas the Agora fingers have been less thoroughly finished. A last difference between the two is that the angle between the back and side planes of the little finger has been rounded over on the Agora hand while on the Dipylon hand it remains distinct. The torso fragment B presents no direct join with the thin sliver of thigh adhering to the hand. The hand's approximate position, close to the broken edge, may be ascertained partly from comparison with other kouroi of the group and partly from the plane of a narrow dark streak in the marble that cuts through the thigh fragment near its front edge and reappears intersecting the flaring upper part of the wrist. The streak confirms the association of hand and torso that was already suggested by the identity of color, surface finish and weathering. In B the features common to all the Attic members of the group are: 1) the presence of a girdle-like ridge above the hips (P1. 84, c); 2) a curved groove marking the depression over the great trochanter (P1.
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